Sunday, October 13, 2024

The Whitney

The Whitney is among New York's many storied art museums, but, as the museum of modern American art, we had to talk ourselves into going: we are confirmed Eurocentrics and particularly value works that have stood the test of time. But we went nonetheless and particularly enjoyed the Whitney and its collection, in part because of a great docent (Jan) and tour, and also because of the electricity of the Free Friday Night crowd. We'll be back. And we may approach contemporary art with a little greater understanding.

So our strategy with NYC's plethora of museums has been
to go for the reduced fare, the free Friday nights, the "pay
what you wish" days; with the encyclopedic Met, we were
sure we'd visit sufficiently often to justify a membership; 
with most of the others, $30 or more per person/per visit
seemed too much to risk on what might well have turned out
to be, um, not to our taste...

We wisely enrolled in the one hour tour of the Whitney's
classics, led by a museum pro, Jan, one of the best we've
had over the years; above is The Brooklyn Bridge: 
Variation on an Old Theme
, by Joseph Stella, 1939

Elsie Driggs, Pittsburgh, 1927

George Bellows, Dempsey and Firpo, 1924; that's Dempsey being
knocked out of the ring...but he came back to win

Florine Stettheimer, New York/Liberty, 1918-1919; 
the Whitney's first acquisition

Georgia O'Keefe, The Mountain, New Mexico, 1931

Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, founder and major supporter of
the museum; also an artist herself and a visionary, founding an
art museum where artists themselves would take the lead...the
portrait by Robert Henri, 1916 

Thomas Hart Benton, The Lord Is My Shepherd, 1926;
deaf couple

Charles Sheeler, The River Rouge Plant, 1932: FoMoCo...

Georgia O'Keefe, Summer Days, 1936 (a gift of Calvin
Klein, 1994)

Andrew Wyeth, Winter Fields, 1942

Edward Hopper, Early Sunday Morning, 1930

Edward Hopper, A Woman in the Sun, 1961 (the model was his
wife, Josephine Nivison Hooper, then aged 78...the docent noted)

Edward Hopper, Soir Bleu, 1914; as one might infer, Hopper studied
in Paris for a time...multiple art history allusions...)

Clark Gable look-aline detail...









































































































































































































































































































Hopper, Self Portrait, 1925-1930









Paul Cadmus, Sailors and Floosies, 1938; banned by the Navy Department

Andy Warhol, Before and After, #4, 1962; his nose job; seriously
















































Ed Clark, Winter Bitch, 1959; now into the "I could have done that"
realm



After the tour, we took a break and ventured to the top floor overlook

But wait, there's more...one of the Whitney's things that make it 
artist-driven is its biennial show, a juried contest of contemporary
art...think of the Salon, or the Academy...wait, no, don't...anyway,
we ventured onto the floor that features some of these...

A wall of photographs of women's health caregivers...sorry, no documentation

Susan Jackson, Singin', in Sweetcake's Storm, 2017;
hanging painting we liked

Eddie Rodolfo Aparicio, White Dove, Let us Fly, 2024
strangely appealed...a whole dump-truck's worth of
modified amber, volcanic stone, etc.

Another Suzanne Jackson hanging painting
we liked; from Savannah...a SCAD grad?

One entire floor of the Whitney was a multi-media celebration of
the work of dancer and choreographer Alvin Ailey

Music, live performance...

Video of his many performances and projects

And other exhibits of the Afro-American experience...



Saturday, October 12, 2024

Little Island, Or, Ile Flottante

On our Highline walk we'd noticed an interesting structure out in the river, clearly human-made, but also clearly a park, and a very popular one. A few days later we were to visit the Whitney museum and so resolved to see the Little Island park on the way. We had no clue of the adult content at the end of our walk...but now you do...and you have been warned.

Little Island, or, as I prefer, Ile Flottante, which is probably inappropriate
on every level, but, hey, it sounds better; also summons sweet memories

Not always on this site along the Hudson

As later pix will show, the whole "island" was beautifully-
landscaped; here, some false autumn crocus (croci?) are
coming up and out

View south, financial district

Roots of the island

View north

East

Our eventual goal, the Whitney

New Jersey sculpture

Late September color

The River

More sculpture

We thought giving this a twirl might cure my Mal
de Debarquement Syndrome...maybe we twirled it the
wrong way

Headed back to terra firma

Historic piers along here...the Lusitania embarked from the pier on
this site, to be torpedoed by a U-boat off the Irish coast in 1917; the
loss of American life led to the United States' entry into WWI

The Titanic would have docked here...instead, the Carpathia did,
with the survivors...

Helpful map of the Hudson docks and piers

So there we were, crossing 10th Ave., minding our own business,
headed for the Whitney, when there appeared this colorful couple,
crossing toward us, accompanied by photographers...

Clad only in their super-heroic paint jobs

But fully documented, including by me; we regarded this
incident merely as a segue to the Whitney museum of
contemporary American art...


Friday, October 11, 2024

The Met: India

Doing pretty much all of the Met's Asian art in one day was probably a hall or gallery too far for us, but, for some reason, we persevered, we pressed on, persisted, plugged away, perhaps thinking we'd be back. Maybe we will. I took the usual pix, but somehow not the usual accompanying documentation...so I have had to make up my own. [Please note, as the foregoing 4,000 posts show, anything religious here is fair game...]. Our visit to the sex temples of Khajuraho in 2008 also may well have affected our appreciation of the sub-continent's arts. Nevertheless...

Click to enlarge for insight

Statue of Liberty pose

Early Anne Boleyn pose 

St. Christopher

Click to enlarge to see an architectural frieze with mermen playing
musical instruments, 2nd century; mermen!

Super hero deity: the cape is a total give-away; actually a large
metal Buddha icon, north India, 7th; interesting representation
of divine sexuality


Said to be a phallic thing; "ooooo", "ick" she seems to
be saying...

Unusual dorsal view

Head scratcher (slashes through ignorance); Kashmiri style



Really into multiple limbs and other things

Conehead prototype

Breastplate of the Spirit Deity Jumadi; 20th century,
worn by shamanic priests (priestesses?); possibly somewhere
other than India, but culturally close

Ever noticed how dogs and their owners come to look alike?

Electrifying yoga pose

Dynamic Duo 

Gothic Buddhess? 

Pierrot 

Jewel casket, ivory, 17th, Sri Lanka

Ceiling of a reconstructed temple, carved wood, too many
steps to climb up to...impressive even from afar, however

Memories of Khajuraho...

What other blogs don't show you

Votive offering to fertility goddess


Very intricate earrings; earplugs, I mean

Swiss Army deity; okay, I think maybe we need a do-over for
the India collection; alternatively, you can see all 6,997 objects
yourself here